M.I.A has already broken through with unprecedented
success in America playing sold out shows in New York and the SXSW festival.
With her mash-up of bhangra, ragga, hip hop and electro being the most
groundbreaking fusion since Missy Elliot arrived on the scene it's not
hard to see why.

The daughter of a Tamil fighter ( The Tamil's being
a revolutionary organisation of more than 10,000 members trying to gain
independence from the Sinhalese population), she grew up in hiding across
Sri Lanka and India, moving at a moments notice to avoid a very real death
threat, before settling in the UK. Struggling to fit in she retreated into
her shell before going to St Martin's College, which led to a chance meeting
with Elastica's Justine Frischman. It was to be a meeting that took her
Stateside (in a documentary making capacity at the time) where she hooked
up with producers Diplo, Richard X and Pulp's Steve Mackey for the debut
album proper "Arular" on XL Records.

Now signed to Interscope there is talk of working with
internationally renowned producers (the fact that Dr Dre is signed to Interscope
suggests that he could well be "that" big name producer). Designer Magazine's
Editor Alex McCann caught up with Maya Arulpragasam aka M.I.A aka Missing
in Acton.

Q: You've been getting a lot of recognition Stateside,
but MTV Base Spanking New is the first major mainstream props you've got
over in the UK. How does it feel to be part of a new urban underground?A: Even though tonight I'm doing stuff with the kids
doing grime and da da da daa, it's nice that when we all slot together
it's not that we're all doing the same music. There are subtle differences
and I think it's gonna get weirder. I think when you put all five of us
together tonight you can sense that it's going to be new music and they
better be ready for it.

Q: The album "Arular" is steeped in memories of your
father and your fathers influence, the title itself is taken from your
fathers monikerA: Yeah. In the beginning I did it as a way of finding
him. There were lots of reasons, but it kept mounting up and it seemed
that that word had so much affect on my life. My mates were like did you
know that your dads name when you spell it "A and then rular" it says a
ruler - kind of was he that much of an egomaniac? But it was a Sri Lankan
word and that's why he's got it, the name. I thought if I use it for the
album he would find it on the internet. I always imagined there would be
so much of it on the internet he'd go, who's that girl, and find out who
I am. It worked because I know that he knows about and I got a message
saying, "please change the title of the album". On one hand I did find
him and on the other he asked me to change the name.

Q: How was it for you when you got that simple but
forceful message from your estranged father?A: It was really mad because it was the day before the
Tsunami and then after that I heard that his entire house had been swamped
and all the computers had gone. I haven't really heard from him since then.
I know he's all right and everything, but he's moved somewhere else. It's
kind of mad. It's too much to deal with, like I kind of wished it upon
myself to find him and then I did by naming my album that name...but to
deal with the actual reality is really heavy. Unless you've actually got
time to actually sit down and work through all of that and to actually
have time to go and see him and stuff. I feel like I can't open that can
of worms right now. At least I should wait until I get off tour.

Q: Did you know for sure that when you named the title
"Arular" he would get in contact?A: I just wished that theory worked at the time. I was
like imagine if that's how you lived. I was like why not make the product
and then make it useful for your personal life by literally making it work
for you. Then it actually worked and it worked so quickly, I was like "shit,
that's just amazing!!!". It's really hard to explain because I really wasn't
expecting it to come through, but it did, and now I have to deal with it.

Q: The album came out in the States about 2 months
before it came out in the UK. How was it when it blow up for you over there?A: When I sensed it and I kept coming back to England
and saying I don't know how to put it to y'all, it ain't Lemar or Jamelia
but it's doing all right over there. Everyone kept saying, "You're tired,
go and have a lie down, it's a figment of your imagination". And then more
people started coming out from England and seeing it for themselves. It's
interesting yer know. America's so vast and it's so big and people in England
just can't be bothered with this or that. I think a lot of American's relate
to my album because it's about politics and it's such a featured thing
over there right now. You know, in England, politics or anything heavy
is something you brush under the carpet and not talk about because it's
not cool. I mean I can't think of any bands coming out of England now that
are putting their necks on the line to say something or stand up for something.
I think that's really what they really appreciate about it over there,
the fact that it's someone being really ballsy coming out of England.

Q: That's the thing - we haven't got a British equivalent
of Public Enemy or Dead Prez?A: It won't happen. It's a different mentality I think.
In the beginning a lot of people were like "This gal's got such a big mouth.
Who the f**k is she?", and then in America it was like your mouth is not
big enough. You need to shout louder!!! It was nice to have somewhere where
you worked really bolshy, but my songs are not really about dissing an
individual. It's on a different level and talking about subjects that are
not really covered on normal albums.

Q: I guess it helps with the sound of the album - it
doesn't sound American, it doesn't sound British. It doesn't sound as if
it's from a particular place.A: It just that that's what I am. I was like coming Sri
Lanka and then I lived in England and then there was a lot of stuff that
I was doing in America. I've got family in America so I used to go out
and stay there quite a lot. I knew how the underground and street culture
worked. I grew up with hip-hop and stuff. It has to be real and if you're
an artist it has to be a reflection of your life that you've lived and
your opinions and how they work with society today to make them relevant.

Q: Those early days where you never stayed in one village
for long must have influenced you. The fact that you never felt settled
because of the need to keep moving because the connection with your father
must have had a profound affect on your life?A: It was all right. In the beginning I didn't really
think too much about it. It was just so practical - get up, go now and
we live for another year. When I came to England that was really frustrating
and that was the hardest bit. Because when you're in Sri Lanka and India
there was always the option you were going to go to England. By the time
somebody tracked our birth certificates down and sorted things out we tried
four or five times to leave our village, but the bus would get stopped
and people would get killed or they'd bomb the road. Then we had to wait
for someone else to come up with a new plan how to get out by boat and
so many different things. That's all you cared about - how to get out?
It became a game, fine if they can't get me on land then I'm gonna try
plane.

Q: How was it for you in England when you first moved
over from Sri Lanka? How did you fit in?A: In England we really had to start from scratch and
build our life again because this was our home. We had to build ourselves
from this working class council estate f**ked up position. That was a different
scenario.

I didn't speak English so I played dumb for ages. And
then I turned dumb. In Sri Lanka when you do maths as a 10 year old I was
already doing the equivalent of A-Level maths. They're so full on and into
that kind of stuff. When I came here everybody assumed that I was really
thick because I didn't know English. Then you find other things to do that
make you feel like you can relate. Learning English was just like a nightmare.
It took us about two years when I thought I'm not going to these stupid
dumb classes, because they used to take me and my sister in a van during
school hours and put us in this weird institute with other refugee kids
and special needs kids. We'd learn English like we were 2 years old.

It's kind of why "Banana Skit" is on the album because
it's taking the piss of what I used to have to go through. After that it
was fine though because I found hip-hop and I was off. I learnt a lot of
English through hip-hop because it was like someone's saying something
with some force. When you've had such a dramatic full on life and then
to come to a country where everyone went "little darling". I was so shocked
because it was like I used to get beat in Sri Lanka and I've been stabbed
by pens by teachers for getting one word wrong out of a hundred. You come
to England and when people are teaching they're so nice, it just made me
feel really stupid.

Q: It must have been a lot more relaxed when you went
to St Martins College to study art?A: St Martins was a totally different story. I'd been
in America at that point and I was hanging out with bands. Over there you'd
walk down the street and get hit on all the time and the party's I was
getting invited to. I got completely sucked into that lifestyle, missed
clearing and universities. So when I got back I had nowhere to go for further
education and St Martins was one of those things that popped in my brain.
I really wanted to go there so I just kept ringing everyday and hustling
my way onto the cause through emotional blackmail. It was at St Martins
that was the first time I'd met like what being privileged or wealthy was.
I'm not saying that everyone at St Martin's was well off, but a lot of
people had the luxury to come there, yer know what I mean.

Q: St Martins was the starting point for the music
in many ways - meeting Justine Frischmann from Elastica, going on tour
with them in a filming capacity and then meeting Peaches. Do you feel your
life would have been very different if you hadn't gone to St Martins?A: Before then I was really involved in being in London.
I was moving from council flat to council flat. That was my lifestyle.
I went from Mitcham to Brixton to Hounslow and then East London in Brick
Lane and I got to know every single underground gang. I'd go and hang out
with the Trinny's in Brixton and the indian pakistani's in Hounslow.

St Martin's was the first time I met like white people
in London who were actually from another world. They'd look at me and go
what are you wearing, you know when I'd come into college with a mini-skirt
and wearing my total ragga clothes. They used to be so unaware of the life
that I had, that I found their life really interesting. It taught me a
lot and it took me into a whole other world of London with fashion and
art. It was really amazing, but I was like shit how do I fit into it?

The first thing I did for Justine was the tour video and
then I got the cover art and graphics soon after that. I went over to the
States with Elastica and was filming the show every night, Peaches was
the support act over there, and by the time I got off tour I went a bit
mad. I didn't know what to because I just knew I had to do something meaningful.
For me to be just a really good filmmaker wasn't enough. It had to be a
good filmmaker who made a film about "this" that did something. So I went
out to Sri Lanka and tried to make a film there, but left music behind,
and after that I came back and got asked to spend a week with someone who
had a 4 track in their house. When they left for the day I was really bored
and that was really the first time I'd sat down and tried to make sense
of my music.

Q: What was there first music you made and the first
steps you took to achieve that?A: I got the Roland 505, which Peaches uses, and I just
pressed all the buttons. On the American album there's a skit on there
called "Freedom Skit". That was one of the first beats I wrote and "The
MIA Bonus Track" was one of the first songs I wrote. I was writing lots
of little bits and my friends would come home at night, I'd play it to
them and it would be like where have you been. I think just having someone
say that it was good enough, I was like lets give it a go. I've got to
thank my mates for leaving me alone that day or my life might have been
very different.

Q: It's just these little instances that add up isn't
it?A: I've always lived my life like that because you never
know when anything's going to happen. You have to draw from what's going
around you all the time. For you to just be happy with where you are you've
got to make it resourceful as to how you live. I thought rather than just
bitching about being in that house alone or watching TV, I'd try and do
something. I was just completely obsessed and couldn't do anything else
after. It changed my life.

Q: How did you hook up with all the collaborators on
the album, Steve Mackey from Pulp, Richard X and Diplo?A: I wrote for 2 or 3 months and when I wrote enough
songs I was happy with I started asking around for producers. One of the
first ones I tried to get in touch with was Roots Manuva and Sage from
Bugz In The Attic, but Roots Manuva I couldn't find some reason and Sage
thought I sounded too pop to be doing broken beat. I couldn't believe it
and I just left his club night with my tail between my legs and started
looking for new people. And then I found Steve Mackey and it was like,
I have to work with this guy, so my mates pooled together some money so
I could fly out and see him. In the end he gave me some free studio time
to work on the tracks.

Q: Is there anyone else you'd like to work with or
have you found your dream team?A: I'm still putting them together. I want to go out
to Brazil and do some collaboration's out there because they're meant to
be doing some amazing stuff. And I want to be doing some straight up hip
hop stuff because at the moment i'm getting loads of offers in and I haven't
chosen my camp yet. I think it's good to keep writing all the time because
it's not as if all your creativity comes in a two week block in the middle
of September. It's random when you get that feeling so it's nice to sit
down and work on stuff so you don't have to pick things out of thin air.

Q: He's just done the new Public Enemy album. You should
work with Paris on the Guerilla Funk label. What do you think?A: Everyone tells me that I should work with Paris. He's
on Wall Street and is a part-time financial advisor, which I think is really
amazing. I think it's genius that he's sussed it out, that he can rap and
then give financial advise to his people because they need help with money.
It's quite true.

Q: I always say it's like Missy Elliot times a hundred.
For people who haven't heard your music how would you describe it?A: It's like a walking mix tape. It's like a mix tape
except you get it from one artist rather than 20 artists on one tape. When
I first started I thought journalists would come up with a name, but no-one
has.

***********"Arular" is out now on XL / Beggars BanquetM.I.A tours the UK in JuneFor more info and full dateswww.miauk.com***********

Following Steven Wilsons announcement he'd like to work with M.I.A,
Designer Magazine sent out a request for bootleggers to mash-up the classic
prog rock of Porcupine Tree with M.I.A's electro ragga vocals. Here's the
first results (and look out for more to be added to the list as the results
come ine